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Before the Trail of Tears, there was a war of words. The Cherokee Phoenix was the first Native American newspaper-a radical act of resistance printed in two languages for a nation that refused to disappear. For young printer David Aganstata, every letter he set was a declaration: We are here. We have a voice. We will not be silent. Then they came for the press. Spanning two decades of hope and betrayal, The Law of Ink and Iron follows David from the triumphant first issue through the Supreme Court victory that should have saved everything-and the presidential defiance that doomed it instead.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Before the Trail of Tears, there was a war of words. The Cherokee Phoenix was the first Native American newspaper-a radical act of resistance printed in two languages for a nation that refused to disappear. For young printer David Aganstata, every letter he set was a declaration: We are here. We have a voice. We will not be silent. Then they came for the press. Spanning two decades of hope and betrayal, The Law of Ink and Iron follows David from the triumphant first issue through the Supreme Court victory that should have saved everything-and the presidential defiance that doomed it instead. It is the story of Elias Boudinot, the brilliant editor who signed the treaty that divided his people. Of John Ross, the chief who refused to surrender. And of the brutal choice that tore friends, families, and a nation apart: resist unto death, or survive unto exile. When the militia seizes the press and forces the Cherokee onto the thousand-mile death march west, David carries one thing through the suffering: a single piece of type. The symbol for truth. Because you can destroy a press, you can scatter the type. But you cannot burn what people have memorized. You cannot confiscate what they carry in their heads.
Autorenporträt
Robert Walker spent thirty-five years in the sports betting industry in Las Vegas, a career that provided unexpected training for analyzing the British monarchy. He learned early that the favorite doesn't always win, but the house always survives. When not calculating the survival odds of historical dynasties, he writes about the intersection of high stakes and human folly. He lives in Las Vegas, where the kings are made of neon and usually last longer than the real ones.